BREAKING: The Stanford Rape Is Not Brock Turner's First Arrest

This case just keeps getting more twisted.

While Brock Turner blamed the "party culture" at Stanford for sexually assaulting an unconscious woman behind a dumpster, new evidence suggests that Brock had been drinking and using drugs since high school, before he even set foot on campus.

In his statement, Brock wrote,"I’ve been shattered by the party culture and risk taking behavior that I briefly experienced in my four months at school."

However, according to evidence obtained from his phone, he's been participating in the "party culture" since high school. After police saw a suspicious text alluding to pornography the night of the assault, they obtained a search warrant to go through his phone, and found photos of Brock smoking from pipes and bongs and drinking liquor. His texts reference trying to find a "hook-up" and finding and doing acid (otherwise known as LSD).

Of course, some people choose to engage in risky behavior in high school. While that's their prerogative, the issue here is that Brock misled the court about his history with drinking and drugs.

Also in his statement to the court, Brock said: "Before this happened, I never had any trouble with law enforcement and I plan on maintaining that." But Brock has been arrested before. In 2014, when he and some friends were drinking on the Stanford campus, police approached them, and they fled the scene. The detective identified and called Brock, who returned to the scene wearing a "bright orange tuxedo" and carrying a backpack of beer. He was then arrested.

What's even more concerning than these inconsistencies are the reports that on both night of the sexual assault and a weekend before, he allegedly approached other female strangers with the intent to hook up with them. ABC News reports that on the night of the assault, Brock grabbed another woman and kissed her. The woman pushed him away, and described his behavior as "odd" because, according to court documents obtained by ABC, the two hadn't talked much or flirted. The same night, he approached her again, "put his hands on her waist," and according to court documents obtained by ABC News, she "had to move away from him."

The weekend before, two women encountered Brock at a Kappa Alpha fraternity party, and after dancing and flirting, one of the women says she felt "creeped out" by his persistence. After the woman began to feel "uncomfortable" and “turn[ed] her body away so that he would not be directly ‘behind’ her,” Brock became “touchy” and put his hands on her waist, stomach, and upper thighs.

Even though the prosecutor in the case informed the judge about the cellphone records, drug use, and alcohol consumption, according to San Jose Mercury News, it didn't seem to make an impact on his sentencing. If Brock decides to appeal his conviction, it'll be interesting to see how all of the public outrage over this case influences that outcome.